CONTACT US
(877) 841 9301
830 AM - 5PM PST
CALIFORNIA HEADQUARTERS

Custom Poker Tables

Custom Poker Tables

Archive for the ‘MattyZ - Poker Commentary’ Category

Poker Month in Review-November 2009

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

While the November Nine dominated the headlines in poker over the past month, a few other significant stories came to the poker forefront with a top online poker company making the biggest headlines.

The new look UB.com

Major Internet Poker Room Now UB.com

Major Internet Poker Room Now UB.com

While Full Tilt Poker and Poker Stars seem to frequent poker television broadcasts, I have found Ultimate Bet to be the most user friendly online poker room with its lower deposit requirements (pre online poker ban) and overall game play (love the four color deck option).

Known for its large UB logo, Ultimate Bet has re-branded itself as UB.com and modernized their poker room to accommodate today’s online player.

Their new lobby is much more accessible for users looking for their specific game, whether it be a freeroll tournament or sit and go or a big money, high stakes cash game or tournament.

New poker offerings after the re-launch include four person tables for all formats, new deuce to seven hold ‘em games, improved tournament quality with consistent break synchronizations and enhanced leaderboards, and cash games with anted betting.

In accordance with the site relaunch, UB.com offers new users of its poker room a 111% match of new deposits for as much as $1,100 bonus dollars.

UB’s top representative, Phil Hellmuth, loves the changes that should help the company become a fierce competitor in the quest to be poker’s premier online poker room.

“In the ten years since I have been involved with the UB brand, I have never been prouder to represent the company as much as I am right now. We have great people captaining the ship, we have a great vibe and some serious swagger. I look forward to the day when we are the largest poker site on the planet.”

WSOP Commissioner Resigns

WSOP Commissioner Out

WSOP Commissioner Out

Jeffrey Pollack, the World Series of Poker Commissioner since 2006, has resigned from his post effective immediately.  As of now there is no immediate replacement for Pollack according to the WSOP.

Pollack’s tenure as commissioner is highlighted by bold moves like the creation of the November Nine final table of the main event and the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event that has become the top pro’s most coveted bracelet.

However, there has been a backlash from many old time poker pros from the modernization of the WSOP despite creating a players council.

This reached a boiling point when many people, the most notable being Hall of Famer T.J. Clouiter, were denied a seat the 2009 Main Event due an unexpected rush of entrants on the final day of opening play.

Tidbits

Doyle Brunson’s autobiography, “The Godfather of Poker,” is now available and was met with rave reviews due to the openness of the book.  Brunson provides readers with vivid details of many of his legendary anecdotes throughout his storied poker career and life.

Final table viewer ship was slightly down for the second year of the November Nine according to published reports.

Overshadowed by the main event coverage, Cornel Cimpan won the WPT World Poker finals for his second World Poker Tour title.

A Few Gift Ideas for the Home Game

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

With the holidays approaching here are a few great gift ideas for the poker fan. These products will improve your home game and allow you to play more hands of poker.

Plastic Playing Cards

Sturdy, Good Looking Playing Cards

Sturdy, Good Looking Playing Cards

A personal pet peeve of mine is playing with cards that have folds or creases due to wear and tear.  The easiest way to prevent this is to  purchase a deck or two of plastic playing cards.

COPAG playing cards have been known to last 50 times as long as your average set of paper cards.  Used in many of the world’s best casinos, COPAG cards come with a replacement program so that a damaged card may be replaced for just $1 if your order the cards from copagcards.com.

Offered in standard and jumbo sizes, four color (a personal favorite of mine), and dual formats, you can purchase a deck of COPAG cards for as little as $14.95 (plus shipping).  These cards come with a standard plastic case and you can purchase a leather or wooden case to carry your cards with in (great for the poker traveler).

old-glory-cards

Patriotic Playing Cards

Another well known brand of plastic playing cards is the world famous KEM brand, also used in many casinos.

Perfect for the holiday season, KEM offers 300 and 500 chip poker sets that come with an aluminum poker case, the chips, and two decks of KEM cards (either red and blue or green and brown backgrounds).

For those shoppers looking for specialty sets, KEM offers American Flag, golf, and mallard background cards to add a little spice and excitement to your game.

In looking to upgrade your playing cards you cannot go wrong with either COPAG or KEM and the plastic playing cards will allow the game to run a lot smoother and give you a quality deck(s) of cards that will not need to be replaced frequently.

Poker Genie

Perfect Home Game Accessory

Perfect Home Game Accessory

If you’re like me and tend to forget the details, The Poker Genie is the perfect addition to your home game.

The Poker Genie is a digital monitor that keeps track of time passed during each round of play, antes, and small and big blinds in an easy to use, compact electronic device.

Available at many poker internet retail outlets for $50-$60 plus shipping, the Poker Genie is an affordable accessory that accentuates any home game.

Shuffle Tech Automatic Shuffler

The Auto Shuffler

Awesome Auto Shuffler

For home games that want to replicate the casino setting, the Shuffle Tech Automatic Poker Shuffler provides the same quality card shuffling you receive at the finest casinos.

At the cost of $499.95 plus shipping this product is catered to the serious poker player and is understandably not for everyone reading this.

That being said, I highly recommend this for home game hosts or casinos serious about providing the best poker atmosphere.  Why use an inferior shuffler or deal with human mistakes/imperfections when the Shuffle Tech provides a consistently great shuffle each time.

November Nine Recap-Where Do They Go From Here

Monday, November 16th, 2009

The New Champ

Poker's Newest Ambassador

Poker's Newest Ambassador

While just 21 years old, Joe Cada already grasped the importance of the main event final table and what winning poker’s biggest event would do for his career.

Commenting that his main care was winning the bracelet, look for Cada to become a fixture on the poker tournament and television circuit.

Though Cada certainly received plenty of breaks at the final table he still possesses the raw talent to win his share of tournaments and bracelets during his career and possesses the fearlessness needed to successful in today’s poker world.

Cada’s enthusiasm and love for the game should play well as inherits the role of poker ambassador, traveling the world as reigning world champion.

Poker’s Best Player

Another Year, Another Ivey Run?

Another Year, Another Ivey Run?

Winning this event would have been the crowning achievement for Phil Ivey’s career yet the low-key Ivey can remain somewhat on the periphery thanks to his seventh place finish at the final table.

Still, Ivey desperately wants to win this event and vowed to make a return final table in upcoming years.  If anyone can overcome the odds and out duel the massive main event field again it is the unquestioned best player in poker today.

After a banner 2009 WSOP where Ivey won two bracelets and made four final tables I expect him to continue going after Phil Hellmuth’s record of 11 bracelets and cement his legacy as one of the games’ all time greats.

This Year’s Everyman

Returning to Obscurity

Returning to Obscurity

Each year an unknown amateur propels his way onto the poker radar and this year people became familiar with a Maryland logger named Darvin Moon.

Like Ivey Moon prefers to keep a low profile and admitted at the final table that he would not have been a good ambassador as main event champion.

In the end his lack of experience and skills relative to the competition proved to be Moon’s undoing.  Going forward I do not believe that we will see much of Moon other than a possible future main event appearances and coverage of him going out on the first day.

Fabulous Frenchman

A Bright Future Ahead

A Bright Future Ahead

Despite Cada becoming the eventual winner I think the emerging star (from a pure poker sense) from the main event has to be Antoine Saout.

An unknown entering this year’s main event, Saout has gone on to make the final table of the WSOP Europe Main Event and gave himself a real chance to win at this final table despite entering second to last in chips.

Saout has the ideal combination of instincts and ability to engage in big hands when the situation calls for it (a trait that is of the utmost importance in modern poker).

Assuming he stays committed to improving and playing tournaments it should not be long before he wins a major event and cements himself as one of poker’s best young players.

Fellow November Niners

A Distinguished Bunch

A Distinguished Bunch

Eric Buchman prefers playing in cash games instead of tournaments but the 30 year old New Yorker should remain a threat to make deep runs in any tournament he chooses to enter.  His resume now has another disappointing final table finish but if he continues to make final tables he should eventually win a major title.

Jeff Shulman returns to being Card Player Magazine editor first, professional poker player second.  Should he choose to play in more events I think Shulman could start adding victories to his strong resume (especially given his part-time status).

James Akenhead also made both WSOP main event tables and unfortunately went out first in both cases.  However, the talent he exhibited in making both those runs should lead to him being a regular at future final tables.

Kevin Schaffel proved his poker mettle at this final table and by finishing runner-up at the recent World Poker Tour Legends of Poker.

Finally, Steve Begleiter will be happy to known for something besides being at the apex of the Bear Stearns collapse and he certainly now has the ability and bankroll to focus on poker full time.

I am not real high on his poker future but hopefully Begs can prove me wrong and continue to be competitive in poker tournaments.

November Nine Recap-Final Table Reaction

Monday, November 16th, 2009

First off, I apologize to any readers that were misled by the latest headline on the blog.  That was for my preview article predicting Eric Buchman to be champion, which did not turn out to be the case.

Behold Lady Luck

This Symbolizes Final Table Play

This Symbolizes Final Table Play

With a table of strongly skilled players (and a Maryland logger) at the final table, luck inevitably played a major role in determining the champion. It turns out that you wanted to enter heads-up showdowns with the lesser hand.

Champion Joe Cada won the two showdowns that propelled him to victory with his pocket deuces out-flopping Antoine Saout’s pocket kings and his pocket threes trumping Jeff Shulman’s pocket jacks.

Also, in a coin-flip showdown where Cada eliminated Saout he hit a king on the river for his A-K to best Saout’s pocket eights.

Darvin Moon’s roller coaster ride featured knocking out Phil Ivey with A-Q when Ivey held A-K and making Steve Begleiter go begging with A-Q against Begs’s pocket queens.

On the flip side, the steady Kevin Schaffel was on a major role during the second level of play when his pocket aces were trumped by Eric Buchman’s pocket kings (Buchman hit a king on the flop and turned quad kings for the final knockout blow).

All in all, these crazy showdowns led to a Darvin Moon-Joe Cada heads-up final that few would have (or should have) predicted. As Andrew Feldman from ESPN poker stated, “I’m trying to compare the luck factor between Darvin Moon and Cada, and honestly, it’s pretty comparable.”

Regrettable Plays

Mistake After Mistake at the Final Table

Mistake After Mistake at the Final Table

Darvin Moon’s entire final table could be classified as a bad play and his luck finally ran out in heads up after he wagered his entire stack on Q-J suited.

An early Moon misstep against Saout gave the dangerous French player the chips he needed to make a deep run (Saout ended up finishing third and as I outlined earlier was unlucky to be knocked out there).

Moon later bluffed off a big part of his stack to Steve Begleiter, which Begs promptly gave to Saout on a middle pair he overplayed.

This did not receive a ton of attention during live coverage but Phil Ivey put himself into a major hole that he never recovered from when he doubled up Joe Cada.

Ivey called off about 4 million chips (a fourth of his stack) with just A-8 off-suit and Cada’s pocket fours held up during the showdown that took Cada’s chances off of life support (at one point Cada was down to just five big blinds after losing a showdown to Jeff Shulman and only had about 5 million chips before winning this pot).

Finally, Eric Buchman lost most of his stack overplaying A-Q off-suit four handed. While four betting with that hand in his spot is not an awful play in theory it was one that I believed to be terribly unnecessary given that Cada and Moon were busy throwing chips around and Saout (his opponent in the hand, who happened to be holding A-K) was the one player left I would have advised him to avoid when possible.

Unpredictability

Life (and Poker) is Unpredictable

Life (and Poker) is Unpredictable

While Moon proved to be the mediocre (being kind) amateur player that his profile suggested and Cada threw chips around extremely loosely as I figured could happen, they still managed to be the last players left standing.

If the final table was a best of seven type of event Cada and Moon would probably prove to be seventh and ninth best players there respectively (with Begs in between). However, in a one-time setting they managed to have the fortune to play heads-up for the title with Cada taking home the ultimate prize.

Unfortunately the axiom of tight players not winning tournaments will prove to be true when guys throw around chips so hastily and so much is reliant upon showdown hands.

Jeff Shulman played a steady, intelligent game at the final table and in the end finished in fifth place after losing one big hand to Cada and then a coin flip to Saout (when he was basically down to the felt).

Though Ivey likely regrets getting into the showdown with Cada he still wisely managed his short stack throughout the event and was only eliminated when Moon got lucky against him.

Finally, Saout made all of the right plays throughout the night and deserved to be playing heads-up against Moon with a 34 million chip lead (about a 60-40 edge). Instead, Cada got lucky in an aforementioned showdown and then won the re-match coin flip to knock him out.

In future years I hope that the main event final table has the same level of strong players and that the Darvin Moon’s and Joe Cada’s of the world get the fate their play deserves.

November Nine Prediction-The Champion

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Your 2009 World Series of Poker Main Event Champion, Eric Buchman

No Longer Under the Radar Come Tuesday

No Longer Under the Radar Come Tuesday

That is the headline that I believe the poker and sports world will wake up to early Tuesday morning, with the 30 year old New Yorker taking home poker’s biggest prize.

Many prognosticators will be picking Ivey, Shulman, or Darvin Moon (because of his chip lead) to win, but I think that Buchman’s ability, experience at this level, and deep chip stack (second in chips entering final table play) leads him to victory.

Not yet a household name in the poker name, Buchman nonetheless possesses a strong resume with two previous WSOP final table (one this year) and a runner-up finish at a WSOP circuit event.

The only poker credentials Buchman lacks is a major championship and in a few days I believe that he claims poker’s biggest championship.

Why Here:

First and foremost, Buchman has the combination of skills and experience needed to take home this type of title, especially against a strong final table.

A seasoned poker pro that has spent most of this decade on this poker circuit, Buchman should not be fazed playing on this grand stage.

Likewise, his reserved temperament plays well under the bright lights of the Rio Theater where poker’s collective attention will be focused on the event.

Although Buchman’s previous final table track record shows many cases of close, but no cigar, that losing experience could prove to be valuable in showing him what may or may not work in this setting.

After sucking out early on day eight to keep his tournament life alive, Buchman rode the momentum to gather his current strong chip stack.  I think that suck out will prove to be fateful when Buchman is strapping the bracelet to his wrist.

Why He Will Make Me Foolish:

Though Buchman enters second in chips, he is actually closer to sixth place Kevin Schaffel then he is chip leader Darvin Moon.  One big lost pot and Buchman will be right back in the middle of the pack and vulnerable to elimination.

While his resume leaves little to be desired compared to the vast majority of poker players, it pales in comparison to that of Phil Ivey and Jeff Shulman.

Ivey has a long road to hoe before he can gather the chips needed to make it to heads up/final few players but Shulman has the chips to navigate his way through the table and collect the pots needed to win.

Also, Buchman has to yet to prove he can win an event of this significance and until he does there is reason to be somewhat skeptical.

Summary

I decided to stick my neck out a bit and take Buchman to win instead of the noted pro with a strong chip stack of his own (Shulman) and the best player in poker today (Ivey).

With his chip stack, Buchman will take advantage of the mistake Moon or Begleiter makes and go on from there to control chips the rest of the way.

Previous Predictions/Preview Articles:

November Nine Observations

Number Two Jeff Shulman

Number Three Phil Ivey

Number Four Kevin Schaffel and Number Five Darvin Moon

Number Six Antonie Saout and Number Seven Steve Begleiter

Number Eight James Akenhead and Number Nine Joe Cada